Friday, March 4, 2016

'Dangerous Faggot' Provokes Tear of Rage in Pitt Crybullies

University Students Traumatized After Milo Yiannopoulos Speaks on Pitt Campus
The University of Pittsburgh’s Student Government Board held a public meeting on Tuesday to discuss the traumatizing visit the night before from “dangerous” homosexual and Breitbart Tech Editor Milo Yiannopoulos, during which students described themselves as feeling “hurt” and “unsafe.”
“During his talk, Yiannopoulos called students who believe in a gender wage gap ‘idiots,’ declared the Black Lives Matter movement a ‘supremacy’ group, while feminists are ‘man-haters,’” according to the student paper The Pitt News, prompting a handful of twenty-something-year olds to feel upset.
Three for three, I'd say.
“Just because we have to be neutral with our funding doesn’t mean we’re personally neutral,” announced board member Jack Heidecker at the meeting. “I hurt yesterday, too.”
“So many of us shared in our pain. I felt I was in danger, and I felt so many people in that room were in danger,” proclaimed Marcus Robinson, student and president of the Pittsburgh Rainbow Alliance. Robinson also suggested that councilors should have been provided in another room to protect students who felt “traumatized” by Yiannopoulos’s opinions.
“This is more than hurt feelings, this is about real violence. We know that the violence against marginalized groups happens every day in this country,” claimed social work and urban studies major Claire Matway. “That so many people walked out of that [event] feeling in literal physical danger is not alright.” . . .
(You were “feeling in literal physical danger”? Really?)
Everybody everywhere is always in 'literal physical danger'. The world is a dangerous place. Anyone could literally be struck dead by meteor at any second. However, the added danger from going to listen to Milo mostly involves the chances of being struck by car crossing a street to go to the talk. Or worse, hearing an opinion contrary to their own.
Student Government Board President Nasreen Harun is reported to have “teared up” after “hearing students’ experiences as a result of Milo Yiannopoulos’ talk on Monday.”
“We’re very sorry people are feeling the way they are and it was not intended… and we’re sorry people are not proud to be at Pitt,” she expressed in deep remorse.
These Special Snowflakes™ are so pathetically weak.
You always need to remember that the Special Snowflakes™ crybullies are a tiny, but extremely loud fraction of the student bodies here, as well as nearly everywhere else. Most college students are out there doing what college students have been doing for years, trying to juggle drinking, schooling and sex, and not paying the least bit of attention to these assholes.

And they don't really look all that hurt or upset:

http://ow.ly/YYHWm  

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